Yesterday, I saw (without hearing(!)) a male Prothonotary Warbler in the (St. 
Paul) Crosby Farm Park location where they have nested in recent years.  This 
is in the eastern corner of the park, near the Mississippi, a few hundred yards 
west of the I-35E bridge.  If you enter the park at the main entrance on 
Shepard Road at Gannon Road, and drive to the last parking lot, you have a 
two-mile hike to the far corner of the park.  More convenient is the old former 
secondary entrance on Shepard Road at Elway Street (there's a traffic light 
there, just west of I-35E).  Unfortunately, there's only room for three cars to 
park there, so you have to be lucky.  In the alternative, you can drive a few 
hundred yards up Elway Street and park on Montreal Avenue, then walk back down 
into the park.  From that old entrance, go down the paved road to where it 
turns right and goes along the south side of Crosby Lake.  But instead of 
turning right, bear left on a dirt trail into the woods.  Continue about a 
half-mile, always bearing left, until the trail turns right along a waterway.  
This is the beginning of the Prothonotary habitat.  The bird(s) may be seen or 
heard anywhere for the next 100 yards or so.  You'll see where the best habitat 
is (flooded dead trees, lots of woodpecker cavities for nesting).  There's a 
lot of vehicle noise from I-35E, and there are a lot of American Redstarts in 
the area, who often sing a song that is amazingly similar to that of the 
Prothonotary.

Julian Sellers
St. Paul
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